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THE NEW YORKER


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NEWS & CULTURE

Daily Comment


MIDWEST ABORTION PROVIDERS BRACE FOR A POST-ROE WORLD

With federal protections imperilled, advocates expect a dramatic influx of
interstate “refugees” seeking care.

By Peter Slevin

Our Columnists


AT LAST, ENCOURAGING NEWS ON INFLATION

The employment report for April indicates that an important driver of rising
prices is moderating.

By John Cassidy

Fiction


“NONDISCLOSURE AGREEMENT”

“I’d quit without giving notice. It had felt satisfying. It had felt redemptive.
‘Don’t think about ever coming back here,’ my team leader had told me.”

By Saïd Sayrafiezadeh

Postscript


KATHY BOUDIN’S RADICAL LIFE

She became infamous for her involvement in acts of political violence. Then she
found her way out of the abyss.

By Rachael Bedard

In the Streets



DEVASTATED BY THE ABORTION NEWS? TRY PRIMAL SCREAMING

By Michael Schulman

Elements



MAKING NEW CLIMATE DATA FROM OLD TIMBER

By Rivka Galchen

Letter from Biden’s Washington



PARTISANSHIP IS BIDEN’S ONLY CHOICE AFTER THE SUPREME COURT LEAK

By Susan B. Glasser

Photo Booth



A FRESH VIEW OF QUEER MASCULINITY, THROUGH SCRAPS OF OLD MAGAZINES

By Vince Aletti

Portfolio



THE COSTS OF WAR

Photography by James Nachtwey





PUZZLES & GAMES


NAME DROP

A quiz that tests your knowledge of notable people, published every weekday.


THE CROSSWORD

A puzzle that ranges from lightly to considerably challenging, published every
weekday.


THE CRYPTIC CROSSWORD

A weekly puzzle for lovers of wily wordplay.


CAPTION CONTEST

We provide a cartoon, you provide a caption.



SPOTLIGHT

The New Yorker Radio Hour


STEPHANIE HSU ON “EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE”

The actress talks with Jia Tolentino. And we look at the coverage of Ukrainian
war refugees, and white empathy.

With David Remnick

The Current Cinema


THE SOLITARY WOE OF AN ILLEGAL ABORTION

“Happening” stares urgently at a possible future in which pregnant women might
again be denied access to safe termination.

By Anthony Lane

Daily Comment


WHAT A SUPREME COURT LEAK SAYS ABOUT ABORTION’S FUTURE

The fragility of the right to an abortion has become synonymous with the
fragility of the Court’s legitimacy.

By Jeannie Suk Gersen

Q. & A.


THE JOURNALISTIC PITFALLS OF THE TRUMP ERA

The authors of a new book discuss how reporting functioned during a period of
upheaval and what Mitch McConnell extracted from Trump.

By Isaac Chotiner

Daily Comment


OF COURSE THE CONSTITUTION HAS NOTHING TO SAY ABOUT ABORTION

There is no mention of the procedure in a four-thousand-word document crafted by
fifty-five men in 1787. This seems to surprise Samuel Alito.

By Jill Lepore

The Daily


EMBEDDING WITH A MEDICAL BATTALION IN UKRAINE

The correspondent Luke Mogelson talks about reporting from the front lines and
the sense of unity that the conflict has created in the country.

By The New Yorker

Tables for Two


BULLFROG IS A MUST AT SO DO FUN

The new Gramercy restaurant serves Sichuan for a Cantonese clientele,
with specialties including sliced beef with pickles and tomato soup.

By Hannah Goldfield

The Front Row


WITH “IN FRONT OF YOUR FACE,” HONG SANGSOO REACHES NEW HEIGHTS

In the luminous tale of an actress’s homecoming, the South Korean director takes
on the mysteries of life and art.

By Richard Brody




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Yorker app.

Audio available
Books


THE MAKING OF A FEMICIDE

A Mexican novelist explores how murderous male rage flourishes in an ailing
society.

By Juan Gabriel Vásquez

Audio available
A Critic at Large


OUR OBSESSION WITH ANCESTRY HAS SOME TWISTED ROOTS

From origin stories to blood-purity statutes, we have long used genealogy to
serve our own purposes.

By Maya Jasanoff

Audio available
Profiles


HOW ELISABETH MOSS BECAME THE DARK LADY OF THE SMALL SCREEN

The actor—who is also a director, a rom-com fan, and a Scientologist—likes to
swim in the weird.

By Michael Schulman

Audio available
Letter from Ukraine


HOW UKRAINIANS SAVED THEIR CAPITAL

When Russia attacked Kyiv, Ukrainians dropped everything to protect the city—and
to ease one another’s suffering.

By Luke Mogelson




CONTRIBUTORS

Jessica Winter
Daily Comment


WHAT’S MISSING FROM ALITO’S DECISION TO REVOKE THE RIGHT TO ABORTION

Emily Witt
Letter from Los Angeles


CAN SUSTAINABLE SUBURBS SAVE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA?

Sheelah Kolhatkar
Currency Dept.


MAKING ART OUT OF INFLATION

Cal Newport
Cultural Comment


OUR MISGUIDED OBSESSION WITH TWITTER

Sheldon Pearce
Listening Booth


KEHLANI’S SONGS OF SELF-IMPROVEMENT

Benjamin Wallace-Wells
The Political Scene


WHAT J. D. VANCE’S VICTORY IN OHIO MEANS FOR TRUMPISM

Isaac Chotiner
Q. & A.


UNPACKING THE DRAFT SUPREME COURT OPINION SET TO OVERRULE ROE

Doreen St. Félix
On Television


“THE FIRST LADY” IS A BAD-WIG COSTUME DRAMA




DAILY CARTOON

This week’s cartoons »
“She’s still getting ready.”
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Cartoon by Amy Hwang

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to.


PHOTO BOOTH

The work of great photographers, past and present.


THE NEW YORKER DOCUMENTARY

Uncommon perspectives on issues that matter to us now.


THE NEW YORKER RADIO HOUR

A weekly mix of in-depth interviews, profiles, and more, hosted by David
Remnick.


FROM THIS WEEK’S ISSUE

All issues »

Luke Mogelson on volunteer medics in Ukraine, Michael Schulman on Elisabeth
Moss, Maya Jasanoff on ancestry, and more.

Table of Contents »
May 9, 2022


“Hang Time,” by Kadir Nelson.




FICTION FROM THE ARCHIVES

More by this author »


JOHN UPDIKE


SELECTED STORIES


 * THE FULL GLASS
   
   “That icy water held an ingredient that made me, a boy of nine or ten, eager
   for the next moment of life, one brimming moment after another.”


 * OUTAGE
   
   “When he had seen her in the center of the road he had thought for an instant
   she was a ghost.”


 * SNOWING IN GREENWICH VILLAGE
   
   “The snow, invisible except around street lights, exerted a fluttering,
   romantic pressure on their faces. ‘Coming down hard now,’ Richard said.”


Photograph by Sally Soames / Camera Press / Redux
John Updike’s career at The New Yorker began with a poem, published in 1954,
when he was twenty-two, and ended with a poem, published in 2009, a few weeks
after his death. In between, Updike, whom George Saunders called “a
once-in-a-generation phenomenon, if that generation is lucky,” published more
than a hundred and forty stories exploring family, marriage, infidelity,
mortality, and what he called “the American Protestant small-town middle class.”


SELECTED STORIES


THE FULL GLASS

“That icy water held an ingredient that made me, a boy of nine or ten, eager for
the next moment of life, one brimming moment after another.”


OUTAGE

“When he had seen her in the center of the road he had thought for an instant
she was a ghost.”


SNOWING IN GREENWICH VILLAGE

“The snow, invisible except around street lights, exerted a fluttering, romantic
pressure on their faces. ‘Coming down hard now,’ Richard said.”
Fiction Podcast
Roger Angell Reads John Updike
Personal History
Lost Art

More by this author »


HUMOR

Daily Shouts


MOTHER’S DAY GIFTS FROM MY TODDLER

Including a tender little kiss, directly on my eyeball, at 5:30 A.M.

By Susanna Wolff

Sketchbook


OVERHEARD IN NEW YORK: LURKING ALONG CANAL STREET

“It’s just New York.” “We all suffer.”

By Colin Tom

Satire from The Borowitz Report


KAVANAUGH ASKS IF ANYONE HAS SEEN BRIEFCASE HE ACCIDENTALLY LEFT AT BAR

The jurist said that, after work last Friday, he dropped into a bar near the
Supreme Court “to have a few pops.”

By Andy Borowitz

Blitt’s Kvetchbook


LADY LIBERTY’S RESPONSE TO JUSTICE ALITO

Beware the mighty woman with a torch.

By Barry Blitt

Daily Shouts


WINE-BUYING TIPS FOR PEOPLE WHO ARE RUNNING LATE

The only geography to note is the bottle’s proximity to the store’s exit—the
closer it is, the quicker you can check out!

By Nate Odenkirk

Shouts & Murmurs


MASTERING THE ART OF STRESS EATING

If Julia Child were alive today, you can bet she’d be putting Flamin’ Hot
Cheetos in the ratatouille.

By Jiji Lee





VIDEO


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A MOTHER’S PLEA TO KEEP HER FARM RUNNING

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THE BUS RIDE FROM HELL





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